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After a couple of days of almost no sleep, about 6 Red Bulls and an app, Yahoo Open Hack Day Europe 2011 was over.
Initially I only wanted to go to tech talks. Later I though that I should go as hacker because I didn’t what to miss anything from the event, but not to present a project. Ultimately I was chosen to present the project.
Everything began at 7 am, when a colleague came to pick us up in time to have a cup of coffee before the event. We were 6 attendees so we thought that we can split into two teams.
At about 9 am we’ve arrived at Crystal Palace Ballrooms. We were greeted by the “crew” in green t-shits, who have guided us to the registration offices.
Once registered we started looking for a table in the room where all 6 of us can sit. In the room there were about 350 people who came for both hacking and tech talks.
In the middle of the room there was a table reserved for experts and Yahoo! staff. At some point a colleague tells me: “isn’t that Crockford?”. Indeed he was at the reserved table Douglas Crockford, along with many other important Yahoo! figures. I’ve rushed to get my book (JavaScript: The Good Parts) which I’ve brought specially for this event hoping to get an autograph.
Nervous, I approached his table: “Mr. Crockford?”, he saw the book and smiling he answered “Hey, my book!”. Nervously I gave him a pen and asked him to give me an autograph. I know it sounds ridiculous, but for me to meet someone of DC stature, about who I’ve only saw presentations at Google and Yahoo! and read his book, to meet face to face, to have the opportunity to ask for an autograph and shake his hand was like meeting a famous actor.
I’ve returned to our table and I’ve bragged to everyone with my autograph, I thought that the first item on my agenda was achieved.
The tech talks began:
- “Hacking 101” by Murray Rowan
- “YQL and other Y! APIs” by Jon Leblanc
- “YUI” by Luke Smith
- “node.js” by Reid Burke
- “Introduction to Yahoo Messenger API” by Vivek V Aggarwal
- “Server Sidedness” by Doug Crockford
Node.js and YQL were the most fascinating talks for me, because I haven’t used neither of the technologies. I find node.js very interesting for JavaScript games, where communication is very dynamic and PHP is not very suitable. On the other hand, if I knew of YQL’s existence it would have helped me get rid of a lot of work so far.
After the tech talks the hacking started. Two of my colleagues were going to make an app to clean the page of anything but relevant content. The remaining four of us were a little puzzled because we had no ideas. What was certain is that we wanted to use node.js or YQL. We started installing node.js on our laptops and see what it can do. Somewhere along the way the idea came, a multi-player snake game which we called “Tequila Worms“. I had to make the UI because I had more expericence with JavaScript games. Initially I wanted to reuse the code base from my snake game. But there was a small problem, I didn’t have the original source code with me. On the other hand it was my first JavaScript game, so it wasn’t exactly “beautiful” written. At that point I decided to start from scratch using canvas.
I was very happy to work on an app without thinking at backwards compatibility.
At about 18:30 there was another talk by Douglas Crockford “The JSON Saga”. I saw this talk before on developer.yahoo.com so I thought is not going to be very exciting for me. But it turns out it was quite different. An interesting part was when one of the slides said “IE6 MUST DIE!”, a very good point, but then… “IE7 MUST DIE!”, then 8 and 9. At some point I was wondering why didn’t he simply write “IE MUST DIE!”. The answer came on the next slide “IE10 MAY LIVE!”. IE10 is the only Microsoft browser that implements “ECMAScript 5: Strict Mode”. The recorded talk can be found at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXiAKPTDXk.
After the talk I’ve asked Douglas Crockford to take a photo with me, one more reason for me to brag that I was to this event!
This talk was the last one until the end of the hackathon.
At about 19:30 it was the entertainment part, sorting algorithms on traditional romanian music:
After that was dinner and a very long night.
After several hours of intensive coding we made a visit to the games room, where waiting for us were: a XBOX, a WII, a Ping-Pong table, Fuzzball table and a pool table. During the night we made serveral visits to the game room to relax and stretch after sitting too long on the purple bean bags.
Sometime after midnight the other team dropped the project because they got stuck in YUI, so only our team remained active.
After 3 am few colleagues began to fall asleep on the bean bags, but in my team sleep was not an option. To prevent me from sleeping I drank 2 or 3 RedBulls. The project was starting to take shape and I said to my self that I will not sleep before we have the first version running.
At about 5:30 am I blinked from a moment and felled asleep with my hands still on the keyboard, for about an hour. One of the most relaxing nap I ever took in my life.
In the morning a new espresso machine appeared to keep us alive for the remaining time, so we continued with new strength.
After getting to a working version it was more of a continuous playing with small brakes to fix the bugs that we found along the way. I think that it seemed fun enough that even Ted Drake came and had a game with us.
After 24h of hacking the end was announced and we had to go and register. I was going to present, I was overwhelmed by the moment. I took a number, set up my monitor and went to eat.
We has a little issue, the game was working fine using websockets over local network and we didn’t know how we were going to do the presentation. After some running around we managed to figure out the details but not the presentation. I realized I was in front of 300 people with no speech and with a game made literally over night. I finished very quickly and I can’t really remember what I said, the only things I could see was the spotlights in my eyes and I was so nervous that I thought I was going to faint. But I think everything turned out ok.
1.5h of presentations by 50 teams followed.
While the jury deliberated we went outside and had a brief conversation with Luke Smith, and a not so brief conversation with Reid Burke which during the night helped us with our project. We’ve started our conversation with Reid on node.js and ended with YUI and why is not very popular. I found out that Reid is only 22 years old and it’s been with Yahoo! for 3 years already. At some point we told Reid that we didn’t like YUI because it has such a different approach then jQuery, but he openly answered all of our questions explaining why they approach things this way. Maby if YUI would better highlight why there doing some things so different it would become a much popular framework.
During the awards Anil Patel (the event host) insisted that presenters should stay on the bean bags in front. And because the jury was getting late Anil told us some funny stories about what happend at other Yahoo! Open Hack events. And because the jury still wasn’t coming back from deliberation he sang us some Abba.
Winners were announced:
- Best Messenger Hack: Yahoo! Social Programming – Corabia Nebunilor
- Best Yahoo! product enhancement: TheBatMail – The BatMen
- Best Hack for Social Good: Map of Deforested Areas of Romania – We plant good deeds in Romania!
- Best Mashup: Ymotion – The Guys
- Best Local Hack – Tourist Guide – Javascript Team
- Best BOSS Hack – Take a Hike – Plan 9
- Hacker’s Choice – The Yahoo! Farm – “Cloud Data in Your BedRoom” – The RoboFun Team
- Best in Show – Pentru 3 mashup-uri: Take a Hike, Quick info, Playlist-O-Matic – Plan 9 – Alexandru Badiu
After the awards we found out why it was so important to sit on the bean bags, presenters would take the bean bags home!
The after-party followed, but we were to tired, so after smoking a cigarette and drinking a cup of wine we ended our trip at Yahoo Open Hack Day Europe 2011!
As a conclusion, the accommodations were almost perfect, no detail was left to chance. I overheard a discussions that they even prepared umbrellas in case the weather would turn bad.
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As I am a big fan of Douglas Crockford, the inventor of JSON, several weeks back I’ve found a new series of presentations. The presentations took place in 2010 and can be found on the YUI blog dedicated page: http://yuiblog.com/crockford/.
Why am I a Crockford fan? There were 3 thinks that surprised me on his first presentation I’ve seen:
- he argued fiercely that JavaScript has good parts, but they are not understood,
- said that JavaScript is a functional language, and as such should be taken in order to discover its beauty,
- he was one of the few to write a true programming book for JavaScript and not just a collection of special effects like the majority did at the time.
The series “Crockford on JavaScript” at Yahoo!, is not exactly new but very topical.
What is different about this presentations is that there not completely focused on syntax, language and “good parts”, but rather on the overview picture, all the story of the language, including the storys of the languages that influenced it.
The presentations are quite long, over an hour each, but very interesting in my opinion, especially if you’re a fan of computer history.
Part Three can be a bit more difficult because there are some notions that may seem quite bizarre. But once you get familiar with them, many other things become more clear.